What Good Are Bugs?: Insects in the Web of Life

What Good Are Bugs?: Insects in the Web of Life

by Gilbert Waldbauer
What Good Are Bugs?: Insects in the Web of Life

What Good Are Bugs?: Insects in the Web of Life

by Gilbert Waldbauer

Paperback

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Overview

We shriek about them, slap and spray them, and generally think of insects (when we think of them at all) as pests. Yet, if all insects, or even a critical few, were to disappear—if there were none to pollinate plants, serve as food for other animals, dispose of dead organisms, and perform other ecologically essential tasks—virtually all the ecosystems on earth, the webs of life, would unravel. This book, the first to catalogue ecologically important insects by their roles, gives us an enlightening look at how insects work in ecosystems—what they do, how they live, and how they make life as we know it possible.

In What Good Are Bugs? Gilbert Waldbauer combines anecdotes from entomological history with insights into the intimate workings of the natural world, describing the intriguing and sometimes amazing behavior of these tiny creatures. He weaves a colorful, richly textured picture of beneficial insect life on earth, from ants sowing their "hanging gardens" on Amazonian shrubs and trees to the sacred scarab of ancient Egypt burying balls of cattle dung full of undigested seeds, from the cactus-eating caterpillar (aptly called Cactoblastis) controlling the spread of the prickly pear to the prodigious honey bee and the "sanitary officers of the field"—the fly maggots, ants, beetles, and caterpillars that help decompose and recycle dung, carrion, and dead plants. As entertaining as it is informative, this charmingly illustrated volume captures the full sweep of insects' integral place in the web of life.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674016323
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 10/25/2004
Pages: 384
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x 1.00(d)
Age Range: 14 - 17 Years

About the Author

Gilbert Waldbauer is Professor Emeritus of Entomology at the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

Table of Contents

Macrocosm

Helping Plants

1. Pollinating

2. Dispersing Seeds

3. Supplying Food

4. Providing Defense

Helping Animals

5. Giving Sustenance

6. Giving Protection

Limiting Population Growth

7. Controlling Plant Populations

8. Controlling Insect Populations

9. Controlling Vertebrate Populations

Cleaning Up

10. Recycling Dead Animals

11. Recycling Dung

12. Recycling Dead Plants

Microcosm

Selected Readings

Acknowledgments

Index

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